俄克拉何马大学图书馆西部历史收藏塞米诺尔国家手稿收藏卡特利普,c盖伊(1881-1938)论文1867-1967 5英尺法官。俄克拉何马州律师协会理事会记录(1930-1931);卡特利普的《演讲》(1927-1936);关于俄克拉何马州塞米诺尔县、威沃卡、俄克拉何马州和塞米诺尔印第安民族历史的手稿(日期不详);塞米诺尔印第安人土地分配证书(1901-1902);卡特利普的旅行日记和个人日记(1920-1936);维沃卡共济会的记录(1905-1910);以及Wewoka贸易公司的财务分类账(1867-1872)。C.盖伊·卡特利普于1881年4月6日出生在堪萨斯州梅迪辛洛奇附近。1889年,他的家人逃到俄克拉荷马州,在翠鸟定居下来。 In 1895 they moved to Tecumseh. After a public school education, Cutlip worked as a clerk and stenographer for Judge J. D. F. Jennings until 1901 when he became a stenographer for a lawyer in Wewoka. In 1902 he and his father tried the banking business for short time. Cutlip then became a clerk for the Atlas Abstract Company of Holdenville, which gave him useful training in oil leases. Through private study he became an attorney at Wewoka. From 1908 to 1911, he served as assistant county attorney for Seminole county. In 1919, he bought the Wewoka Trading Company and the Wewoka Realty and Trust Company, which were destroyed by fire in 1925. He was a law partner to Thomas J. Horsley. In 1930, Cutlip became a member of the Board of Governors of the Oklahoma Bar Association. In 1931 Governor William H. Murray appointed Cutlip as judge of the newly created Superior Court at Seminole; he was then elected to the position in 1934. Late in 1936 Cutlip was incapacitated by a heart attack. Recovering, he returned to court in the summer of 1937 only to suffer a second attack that fall. He died on January 24, 1938. Cutlip was active in the Wewoka Masonic Lodge and a member of the Lions Club. He served as the first president of the local Chamber of Commerce. He was Wewoka's first mayor from 1921, 1926 and a delegate to the 1932 Democratic National Convention. Cutlip married Amo Butts in 1903. Their daughter Maxine (Mrs. Claud Douglas) was born in 1906. Amo Cutlip, who served as president of the Oklahoma Federation of Women's Clubs, died on January 14, 1945. Description of Collection